Shreya Singhal: saviour of freedom of speech in India?

Posted: March 25, 2015 at 2:53 pm

Since it was enacted in 2000, the controversial Information Technology Act, has been used by political parties to stifle criticism.

In 2008 it was amended to include Section 66(a), which stated that any person found sending information that was false, "for the purpose of causing annoyance, inconvenience, danger, obstruction, insult, injury, criminal intimidation, enmity, hatred or ill will, persistently by making use of such computer resource or a communication device" could be punished.

Even 'likes' on Facebook were included in the law's provisions.

Now India's Supreme Court has scrapped it - causing the newspaper Firstpost to conclude that 24-year-old Shreya Singhal - the woman behind the law suit - had saved freedom of speech in India.

"The courts are the one place where every citizen can go," said Shreya after the offending law was struck down yesterday. "If you say something in a newspaper or on TV, thats fine, but if you say it on Facebook, you get arrested... I think there are so many people in India who are tech-savvy and very vocal about their views."

Her campaign was triggered by an argument with her mother.

After Shreya returned to India, having completed a degree in astrophysics in the UK, she found out that two girls living near Mumbai had been arrested because of a Facebook post about the controversial late politician Bal Thackaray.

Her outrage led to a heated debate at home, and her mother, herself a lawyer, challenged her to stop shouting and do something. So she did.

On Tuesday the Supreme Court judges found the law unconstitutional, saying it violated the right to freedom of speech and expression enshrined in the Indian constitution.

Facebook and Twitter have been flooded with jubilant messages from academics, students and lawyers.

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Shreya Singhal: saviour of freedom of speech in India?

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